Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1233South Africa
Rapoloti v S (A24/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1233 (28 November 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Rapoloti v S (A24/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1233 (28 November 2024)
Rapoloti v S (A24/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1233 (28 November 2024)
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sino date 28 November 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE NUMBER: A24/2023
25/10/2024
DPP REF. NUMBER
10/2/5/1/3-SA22/2023
Date: 26 NOVEMBER 2024
In the matter between:
TEBOGO
RICHARD RAPOLOTI
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
JUDGEMENT
DU PLESSIS, AJ
1.
This is an
appeal against the sentence only. The Appellant was convicted
on 10 March 2022 in the Oberholzer District Court
on one count of
contravening Section 5A of the Minerals and Petroleum Resources
Development Act, 28 of 2002 as amended (“
the MPRDA Act
”),
in that he, on 9 March 2022 at Driefontein Mine, Number 4 Shaft in
Oberholzer, unlawfully prospected for, or removed,
mine, conducted
technical cooperation, operations, reconnaissance operation, explored
for any mineral or petroleum produce, or
commenced with any work
incidental thereto on any area without –
1.1.
An Environmental Authorisation.
1.2.
A Reconnaissance Permission, Prospecting
Right, Permission to Remove, Mining Right, Mining Permit, Retention
Permit, Technical Cooperation
Permit, Reconnaissance Permit,
Exploration Right or Production Right, as the case may be and;
1.3.
Giving the Landowner or Lawful Occupier of
the Land in question at least 21 (twenty-one) days written notice.
2.
The Appellant was legally represented
by Counsel in the Court
a quo
and remained legally represented
as such throughout the proceedings. A plea of guilty was
tendered by the Appellant’s
Legal Representative by submitting
a
Section 112(2)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
, written
statement.
3.
The Learned Magistrate convicted the
Appellant, apparently on strength of the
Section 112(2)
statement and
sentenced the Appellant to 3 (three) years direct imprisonment
without the option of a fine. The Appellant
had three previous
convictions of contravening
Section 5A
of the MPRDA, 28 of 2002.
4.
On 2 December 2022, the Appellant
applied for and was granted condonation for the late filing of an
application for leave to appeal.
On the same date, the
Appellant applied for and was granted leave to appeal the sentence of
three years imprisonment imposed.
Nobody appeared for the
Appellant. Today in court we were informed by Counsel for the State,
Adv Masekameng , that a certain Mr
Nel the attorney acting on behalf
of the Appellant telephonically informed him that the Appellant
terminated his mandate . No practise
note and no Heads of Argument
were filed by the Appellant’s advocate or his Attorney. However
given the importance of the
matter for the Appellant and the
concession by the trial Magistrate that he erred in the sentence he
imposed , we agreed that it
is in the interest of Justice to proceed
with determining the Appeal.
5.
In the Notice of Appeal, the Appellant
relies on 3 grounds:
“
5.1
It will be submitted that the Learned Magistrate
erred in finding that the
period of direct imprisonment was the only
suitable sentence option.
5.2
It will be submitted that the Learned Magistrate
erred in not exercising
a judicially sound balance between the
seriousness of the offence and the personal circumstances of the
Appellant.
5.3
It will respectfully be submitted that reasonable
prospect exists in
that a different Court may come to a different
finding on the sentence imposed.”
6.
Prior to the application for leave to
appeal, the matter was sent on automatic review in terms of
Section
302
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
. On 3 May 2022,
the sentence was confirmed on review by a Judge of the High Court of
South Africa. However, on scrutiny
of the J4 cover sheet of the
review, where it appears in the record of the Appeal, the sentence of
three years imprisonment was
incorrectly recorded as three months
imprisonment. On granting leave to appeal, nine months later on
2 December 2022, the
Trial Magistrate remarked that:
“
I must
also say that the sentence prescribed by the act is as submitted by
Adv Nel and indeed, I imposed a sentence of three years
direct
imprisonment and after (indistinct) that I have exceeded the sentence
prescribed by the act, I sent this matter on special
review.
Then the Review Judge confirmed my three years direct imprisonment.
Thereafter I did not notice that what the
(indistinct) wrote on J4
(indistinct) the sentence of the accused three months and not three
years. So, I agree with what
Adv Nel has submitted, that
another court may arrive at a different sentence altogether.”
Clearly the confirmation of the
Appellant’s sentence is incorrect and will in any event now be
subject to the outcome of this
appeal.
7.
In the reasons for the sentence
imposed, the Magistrate in the Court
a quo
, remarks:
“
I must
also say that the sentence prescribed [by] the Act is as submitted by
Adv Nel and indeed, I imposed a sentence of three years
direct
imprisonment and after ..... that I have exceeded the sentence
prescribed by the Act...”
8.
Counsel on behalf of the State in his
written submissions to this Court, suggested that the prescribed
penalty:
“
....as
set out in the charge sheet reads as follows: R 100,000.00 or to
imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to
both such
fine and such imprisonment. Section 98 and 99 of Act 28 of 2002
are applicable in this regard and therefore the
a quo misdirected
itself when it imposed a sentence of three years direct
imprisonment.”
And in the Heads of Argument :
“
Section
5(4) of Act 28 of 2002 has been amended by Act 49 of 2008 by the
insertion of Section 5A and therefore the charge sheet
is not
defective in its formulation.”
9.
The interpretation of the prescribed
sentence for a contravention of Section 5A of the MPRDA 28 OF 2002 by
the court a quo, the
Prosecutor and counsel for the Appellant are
wrong and should be dealt with. The contravention of various sections
of the MPRDA
28 of 2002 are declared an offence in Section 98 while
Section 99 of Act 28 of 2002 prescribes the sentence. Section
98 reads
as follows:
“
98
Any person is guilty of an offence if he or she –
(a)
contravenes or fails to comply with –
(i)
Section
5(4)
(
my emphasis) or 28;
(ii)
Section 92, 94 or 95;
(iii)
Section 35;
(iv)
...(repealed);
(v)
Section 44;
(vi)
Any directive, notice, suspension, order, instruction or condition
issued, given or determined
in terms of this act;
(vii) Any
direction contemplated in section 29, or
(viii)
Any
other provision of this act.”
The reference to section 5(4) in
subparagraph (i) above is not a reference to section 5A. Section 5A
can only be covered by subsection
(viii) for the reasons that follow.
10.
Section 99 of the Act, provides for
the following maximum penalties:
“
99
Any person convicted of an offence in terms of this act is liable -
(a)
in the case of an offence referred to in section 98(a)(i) to a fine
not exceeding R 100,000.00
or to imprisonment for a period not
exceeding two years or to both such fine and such imprisonment;
(b)
....;
(c)
....;
(d)
....;
(e)
....;
(f)
....;
(g)
in the case of any conviction of an offence in terms of this act
for
which no penalty is expressly determined, to a fine or to
imprisonment for a period not exceeding six months or to both a fine
and such imprisonment
....”(my emphasis)
Section 98(a)(i) (a
contravention
of section 5(4)
) is provided for in section 99(a). Section
98(a)(viii) (
covering for section 5A
) can only be
provided for in section 99(g);
“
...an
offence in terms of this act for which no penalty is expressly
determined...”
11.
It is common cause that the Appellant
pleaded guilty to and was convicted of the contravention of Section
5A of the MRPDA 28 of
2002, and not section 5(4).
12.
The Trial Magistrate, accepted that a
conviction of Section 5A of the MPRDA, is a contravention of Section
98(a)(i), warranting
the penalty prescribed in Section 99(a) of the
MPRDA viz. a fine not exceeding R 100,000.00 or imprisonment for a
period not exceeding
two years or to both such fine and such
imprisonment. This incorrect approach has its origin the
amendment of Section
5(4) in 2013.
13.
Section 5(4) of the MPRDA was deleted
by Act 49 of 2002 amending the Mineral and Petroleum Resources
Development Act (Government
Gazette 32151 dated 21 April 2009),
effective from 7 June 2013, The same Amendment Act (Act 49 of 2002)
deleting Section 5(4),
provided for the
insertion
(my
emphasis) of Section 5A of the MPRDA 28 of 2002 with effect from 7
June 2013.
The inserted Section 5A reads nearly
identical to the deleted Section 5(4). Section 5(4) before being
deleted read:
Legal nature of prospecting right,
mining right, exploration right or production right, and rights of
holders thereof
5 (4) No person may prospect for or
remove, mine, conduct technical co-operation operations,
reconnaissance operations, explore
for and produce any mineral or
petroleum or commence with any work incidental thereto on any area
without-
(a)
an approved
environmental management programme or approved environ- mental
management plan, as the case may be;
(b)
a reconnaissance
permission, prospecting right, permission to remove, mining right,
mining permit, retention permit, technical co-operation
permit,
reconnaissance permit, exploration right or production right, as the
case may be; and
(c)
notifying and
consulting with the land owner or lawful occupier of the land in
question.
Section 5A reads:
5A. Prohibition relating to illegal
act
No person may prospect for or remove,
mine, conduct technical co-operation operations, reconnaissance
operations, explore for and
produce any mineral or petroleum or
commence with any work incidental thereto on any area without—
(a) an environmental authorisation;
(Commencement date of section
5A(a): 7 December 2014)
(b) a reconnaissance permission,
prospecting right, permission to remove, mining right, mining permit,
retention permit, technical
co-operation permit, reconnaissance
permit, exploration right or production right, as the case may be;
and
(c) giving the landowner or lawful
occupier of the land in question at least 21 days written notice.
(Section 5A inserted by section 5
of Act 49 of 2008 with effect from 7 June 2013)
Although the purpose of the amendment
in Act 49 of 2008 might have been to replace Subsection 4 of Section
5 with Section 5A, that
purpose was not achieved by deleting
paragraph 5(4) and inserting Section 5A as a separate and distinct
section .
14.
Section 98(a)(i) still refers to the
deleted section 5(4) of the MPRDA and will remain a nullity until it
is amended to replace
the reference to section 5(4) with a reference
to section 5A. Until that happens a contravention of section 5A
attracts the offence
referred to in Section 98(a)(viii) – “
any
other provision of this act” ,
and attracts the sentence in
section 99(g) – “
conviction of an offence in terms of
this act for which no penalty is expressly determined, to a fine or
to imprisonment for a period
not exceeding six months or to both a
fine and such imprisonment”.
15.
It follows that the sentence of three
years imposed by the Court
a quo
stands to be set aside.
16.
When interfering with a sentence on
appeal, Maya DP (as she then was) in
S v Hewitt
2017 (1) SA CR 309
(SCA)
, held that:
“
An
appellate court may not interfere with this discretion [the
imposition of sentence is the prerogative of the trial court] merely
because it would have imposed a different sentence.... Something more
is required; .... thus, the appellate court must be satisfied
that
the trial court committed a misdirection of such a nature, degree and
seriousness that shows it did not exercise its sentencing
discretion
at all or exercised it improperly or unreasonably when imposing
it....”
17.
The Court
a quo
misdirected
itself in sentencing the Accused to three years imprisonment, whereas
a maximum of six months imprisonment is the prescribed
sentence.
This misdirection is of sufficient degree and seriousness, that this
Court is entitled to interfere with the sentence.
18.
It would serve no purpose to refer the
matter back to the Court
a quo
, as the Appellant already
served 17 months of his sentence and was released on bail pending the
outcome of this appeal.
19.
The trial Magistrate intended to
sentence the Appellant to a term of imprisonment without an option of
a fine. Sufficient
motivation for this approach exists. The
Appellant admitted three similar previous convictions. The
maximum term of imprisonment
that can be imposed, is six months and
this would be appropriate under the circumstances. As the sentence
would be made retrospective
from the date of his original sentence,
no danger exist that he would serve a further term of imprisonment.
20.
Under the circumstances, I make the
following order:
20.1.
The appeal against sentence is upheld.
20.2.
The sentence of three years imprisonment is
set aside.
20.3.
The Appellant is sentenced to six months
imprisonment, the commencement thereof to run from the date of the
original sentence viz.
10 March 2022.
__________________
DU PLESSIS AJ
I CONCUR
_____________________
MNGQIBISA-THUSI
J (MS)
Judgement
delivered on 28 November 2024.
Counsel for
Respondent : Adv Masekameng
State Attorney.
Pretoria
Counsel for
Appellant : No Appearance
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